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Old July 23rd 05, 07:31 PM
 
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From: "John Smith" on Fri 22 Jul 2005 16:44

Len:

Dumb it down a bit man, you have them confused!


Not my fault...they were confused when I first got here...:-)

Now they think they are clones! They even suspect you of being a
clone!!! (too much startrek when young I suppose.)


Careful there, "John," I watched the OS since the 3rd episode
aired in '67 (was away on biz trip for first two aired). :-)

The neo-20s, neo-30s Re-Enactor pioneers of the airwaves with
"CW" seem to think that ham radio is some kind of 25th Century
subspace radio. HUGE technology gap. But, no different than
the re-enactors of Civil War battles, Revolutionary War
battles, etc., etc. in this modern age.

Back just after the FIRST Gulf War, some BS slinger came in
here announcing he was a "colonel" (retired) and that his
son "was 'behind enemy lines' (supposedly in Iraq) and that
"he sent intel on CW" during that short, brief, brutal,
fast-moving ground action. Pure BS, of course. In 1990 the
military had grown out of the 1940 era of two-tube modulated
oscillator and super-regen battery portables and used a VHF-
UHF portable (PSQ-3) having a 1200 BPS "chiclet" keyboard
that relayed through the military aviation band and orbiting
aircraft (or satellites). The ground war lasted only about
four days with Plan 73 Easting topping ANYTHING that famed
Rommel panzerfausts couldn't hope to top. This BSing dingbat
had overloaded on antiquated History Channel footage or other
pipe-dreaming and wanted to be a "name" in here. Back in
1997 - before the announcement of the "restructuring" NPRM -
some PCTA (that's Pro-Code Test Advocate if you weren't here
back then) types still thought the military USED "CW" for
communications. They don't, but I couldn't convince anyone
(except a very few) of that. It upset their FANTASIES and
the high regard they had for their "valuable skill" (which
no other radio service wanted).

They want to be thought of as special, with each one having a "stark
in contrast" and "special religious fervor" to CW for their own very
PERSONAL and UNIQUE reasons...


Some seem to NEED being "better than others" on SOMETHING. :-)

They have spiffy ready-built radios (designed and built by
others) costing many $$$ or they have spiffy designed and
built by themselves for less than $100 (using state-of-the-
art vacuum tube technology of the 1990s). They use that
wonder of all radio modes, On-Off Keying of a Continuous
Wave carrier ("OOK CW"). Those PCTAs are probably very good
at this "CW" and could get a nice job as a "radio op" of the
1930s era in "shortwave communications." Trouble is, this
is the New Millennium and the year 2005. Ain't NO demand
for such "radio operators." But, they are the BEST! :-)

Some common arguments are "CW is what amateur radio is all
about!" or "CW is the heart and soul of amateur radio!" or
that "'Anyone' can learn morse"...provided they devote a
large part of their free time "to show their dedication and
committment to the amateur community!" Whoopee on the last
since that makes them top-notch radio ops for the 1930s...
75 years too late.

I've never seen the address of this "amateur community" or
seen it on a map...nor is there information on how this
"community" rates new amateurs...it must all be some kind of
transcendental telepathic ability from the epiphany of passing
a morse test.

Now, it's not all that absurd to label the CW fanatics as
members of the ARS...the Archaic Radiotelegraphy Society.
[not my original line, just picked up from another in here
and used unmercilessly] If they want to be "expert" at a
skill that is 75 years out of date, why "FB OM." Thanks,
but I prefer this New Millennium just fine after pursuing
a radio-electronics career begun over a half century ago,
working REAL HF comms en masse on 24/7 "DX" circuits.

I am afraid unless you are able to maintain that fantasy for
them--there is going to be trouble....
straight-faced-look


Well, "that's how it goes..." straight-faced look in return

The fantasizers keep insisting They ARE ham radio and
everybody (by damn) better well take that morse test in
order to be "as good as They." As the old latin phrase
has it, screum. :-)

bit bit


  #2   Report Post  
Old July 23rd 05, 07:59 PM
John Smith
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Len:

Do you think we should set up a website to help the hams to
transition and be accepted by the CB'ers which will be flooding in
like a lot of okies ready to pick cotton?

Maybe a dictionary of CB Terms and a list of the 10 Codes which are
accepted for use by the CB Community? Yanno, "10-fer Good Buddy", and
"I gotta go 10-100!", and "I just had a 10-33 in 'ma pants!", etc...

And, what about power requirements now? Do these hams here have "BEEG
LEENEAIRS?", big enough to be able to compete with monsters which are
coming in from CB? You know as well as I, those multi-kilowatt
pileups on 160 and 80 ain't gonna be pretty!

And, just think, the new pirate chans will probably reach down into AM
Broadcast Band... what about the hams down there listening to art bell
and his con man guest--wayne green? They aren't going to like that
interference yanno... frown

And, what about etiquette? Will these hams be able to adopt a quick
retarded drawl to their voices and speech, and more important--can
they do it and make it believable?

OMG, there is a lot to deal with Len, I am afraid we may not have time
enough to get the hams prepared for the new way of life on the bands!
Got any ideas to ease their transition period--poor buggers?

John

wrote in message
oups.com...
From: "John Smith" on Fri 22 Jul 2005 16:44

Len:

Dumb it down a bit man, you have them confused!


Not my fault...they were confused when I first got here...:-)

Now they think they are clones! They even suspect you of being a
clone!!! (too much startrek when young I suppose.)


Careful there, "John," I watched the OS since the 3rd episode
aired in '67 (was away on biz trip for first two aired). :-)

The neo-20s, neo-30s Re-Enactor pioneers of the airwaves with
"CW" seem to think that ham radio is some kind of 25th Century
subspace radio. HUGE technology gap. But, no different than
the re-enactors of Civil War battles, Revolutionary War
battles, etc., etc. in this modern age.

Back just after the FIRST Gulf War, some BS slinger came in
here announcing he was a "colonel" (retired) and that his
son "was 'behind enemy lines' (supposedly in Iraq) and that
"he sent intel on CW" during that short, brief, brutal,
fast-moving ground action. Pure BS, of course. In 1990 the
military had grown out of the 1940 era of two-tube modulated
oscillator and super-regen battery portables and used a VHF-
UHF portable (PSQ-3) having a 1200 BPS "chiclet" keyboard
that relayed through the military aviation band and orbiting
aircraft (or satellites). The ground war lasted only about
four days with Plan 73 Easting topping ANYTHING that famed
Rommel panzerfausts couldn't hope to top. This BSing dingbat
had overloaded on antiquated History Channel footage or other
pipe-dreaming and wanted to be a "name" in here. Back in
1997 - before the announcement of the "restructuring" NPRM -
some PCTA (that's Pro-Code Test Advocate if you weren't here
back then) types still thought the military USED "CW" for
communications. They don't, but I couldn't convince anyone
(except a very few) of that. It upset their FANTASIES and
the high regard they had for their "valuable skill" (which
no other radio service wanted).

They want to be thought of as special, with each one having a "stark
in contrast" and "special religious fervor" to CW for their own very
PERSONAL and UNIQUE reasons...


Some seem to NEED being "better than others" on SOMETHING. :-)

They have spiffy ready-built radios (designed and built by
others) costing many $$$ or they have spiffy designed and
built by themselves for less than $100 (using state-of-the-
art vacuum tube technology of the 1990s). They use that
wonder of all radio modes, On-Off Keying of a Continuous
Wave carrier ("OOK CW"). Those PCTAs are probably very good
at this "CW" and could get a nice job as a "radio op" of the
1930s era in "shortwave communications." Trouble is, this
is the New Millennium and the year 2005. Ain't NO demand
for such "radio operators." But, they are the BEST! :-)

Some common arguments are "CW is what amateur radio is all
about!" or "CW is the heart and soul of amateur radio!" or
that "'Anyone' can learn morse"...provided they devote a
large part of their free time "to show their dedication and
committment to the amateur community!" Whoopee on the last
since that makes them top-notch radio ops for the 1930s...
75 years too late.

I've never seen the address of this "amateur community" or
seen it on a map...nor is there information on how this
"community" rates new amateurs...it must all be some kind of
transcendental telepathic ability from the epiphany of passing
a morse test.

Now, it's not all that absurd to label the CW fanatics as
members of the ARS...the Archaic Radiotelegraphy Society.
[not my original line, just picked up from another in here
and used unmercilessly] If they want to be "expert" at a
skill that is 75 years out of date, why "FB OM." Thanks,
but I prefer this New Millennium just fine after pursuing
a radio-electronics career begun over a half century ago,
working REAL HF comms en masse on 24/7 "DX" circuits.

I am afraid unless you are able to maintain that fantasy for
them--there is going to be trouble....
straight-faced-look


Well, "that's how it goes..." straight-faced look in return

The fantasizers keep insisting They ARE ham radio and
everybody (by damn) better well take that morse test in
order to be "as good as They." As the old latin phrase
has it, screum. :-)

bit bit




  #3   Report Post  
Old July 23rd 05, 09:46 PM
 
Posts: n/a
Default

From: John Smith on Jul 23, 11:59 am

Do you think we should set up a website to help the hams to
transition and be accepted by the CB'ers which will be flooding in
like a lot of okies ready to pick cotton?


No.

These olde-tyme hammes will do ALL the "help" just as they
have "helped" others in the past.

For example, in 1958 the FCC deallocated the 11m band from
hams and created Class C and D CB. Oh, the Hue and Cry they
raised in the US of A! Imagine, below-30-MHz privileges
WITHOUT TESTING FOR MORSE CODE! Imagine, NO TEST AT ALL TO
GET A FEDERALLY-AUTHORIZED LICENSE!!

All them olde-tymers quickly got into action to Demand Their
Big Band Sound BACK! They're still working on getting it
back. :-)


Maybe a dictionary of CB Terms and a list of the 10 Codes which are
accepted for use by the CB Community? Yanno, "10-fer Good Buddy", and
"I gotta go 10-100!", and "I just had a 10-33 in 'ma pants!", etc...


I'd rather see a "dictionary" of ham terms and what they
REALLY mean...like "your sig is 599 here!" or "FB on that,
OM" or things like spoken "hi hi."

Or all them obscure Q codes that all are supposed to memorize
by heart or something...to sound very "IN" to radio.

insert sound of stifled laughter here

And, what about etiquette? Will these hams be able to adopt a quick
retarded drawl to their voices and speech, and more important--can
they do it and make it believable?


They have and they do. Heard them do it over the years.
Not a pretty sound. But they don't really care HOW they
sound...they ain't in broadcasting nor do they get paid for
what they do. They are HAMS!


OMG, there is a lot to deal with Len, I am afraid we may not have time
enough to get the hams prepared for the new way of life on the bands!
Got any ideas to ease their transition period--poor buggers?


None at all...for the money you are offering.

I haven't been able to "ease" the olde-tyme hammes out of
their stuck-in-the-1930s-standards-and-practices rut for
years. So few know "life" in any other radio service and
their raddddios seldom tune outside of ham bands.

Not to worry, Yanno Smith. Ain't gonna be the "overrun"
of the (HF) ham bands. All those elmering olde-tymers done
discouraged so many for so long with their obsessive NEEDS
to test for morse that most others have simply moved on...

The playground is safe for the Mighty Macho Morsemen. Long
may they beep. Burp.

Say hello to your brother Yanni, Yanno.

bit bit


  #4   Report Post  
Old July 23rd 05, 10:15 PM
John Smith
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Len:

Consider it done, Yanni will be greeted in your name...

Well, I suppose you know what you are talkin' about, you have been
their baby sitter all these years.

However, sometimes it is difficult to even know a CB'er is on band and
CQ DX'ing... some have accused the CB'er of "hanging a carrier" in an
attempt to block communications when this happens...

That isn't the case though and the hams should be warned... have them
just listen closely, if they hear the sound of drooling--that is the
CB'er attempting to communicate--when he un-keys, (the CB'er) on
phone, just have 'em go ahead with the QSO--although in this state the
CB'ers eyes are glazed over--I am still pretty sure he is able to
comprehend every-other-word or so...
grin

John

wrote in message
oups.com...
From: John Smith on Jul 23, 11:59 am

Do you think we should set up a website to help the hams to
transition and be accepted by the CB'ers which will be flooding in
like a lot of okies ready to pick cotton?


No.

These olde-tyme hammes will do ALL the "help" just as they
have "helped" others in the past.

For example, in 1958 the FCC deallocated the 11m band from
hams and created Class C and D CB. Oh, the Hue and Cry they
raised in the US of A! Imagine, below-30-MHz privileges
WITHOUT TESTING FOR MORSE CODE! Imagine, NO TEST AT ALL TO
GET A FEDERALLY-AUTHORIZED LICENSE!!

All them olde-tymers quickly got into action to Demand Their
Big Band Sound BACK! They're still working on getting it
back. :-)


Maybe a dictionary of CB Terms and a list of the 10 Codes which are
accepted for use by the CB Community? Yanno, "10-fer Good Buddy",
and
"I gotta go 10-100!", and "I just had a 10-33 in 'ma pants!", etc...


I'd rather see a "dictionary" of ham terms and what they
REALLY mean...like "your sig is 599 here!" or "FB on that,
OM" or things like spoken "hi hi."

Or all them obscure Q codes that all are supposed to memorize
by heart or something...to sound very "IN" to radio.

insert sound of stifled laughter here

And, what about etiquette? Will these hams be able to adopt a quick
retarded drawl to their voices and speech, and more important--can
they do it and make it believable?


They have and they do. Heard them do it over the years.
Not a pretty sound. But they don't really care HOW they
sound...they ain't in broadcasting nor do they get paid for
what they do. They are HAMS!


OMG, there is a lot to deal with Len, I am afraid we may not have
time
enough to get the hams prepared for the new way of life on the
bands!
Got any ideas to ease their transition period--poor buggers?


None at all...for the money you are offering.

I haven't been able to "ease" the olde-tyme hammes out of
their stuck-in-the-1930s-standards-and-practices rut for
years. So few know "life" in any other radio service and
their raddddios seldom tune outside of ham bands.

Not to worry, Yanno Smith. Ain't gonna be the "overrun"
of the (HF) ham bands. All those elmering olde-tymers done
discouraged so many for so long with their obsessive NEEDS
to test for morse that most others have simply moved on...

The playground is safe for the Mighty Macho Morsemen. Long
may they beep. Burp.

Say hello to your brother Yanni, Yanno.

bit bit




  #7   Report Post  
Old July 24th 05, 05:53 PM
John Smith
 
Posts: n/a
Default

commander:

Well, now they have virtually lost it all--at least all the bands to
CB'ers...

I can see how that will now prompt them to whine and pee all over
themselves...

Awareness, denial, acceptance is the progression with which new ideas
and methods are adopted--most amateurs whose greatest accomplishment
in life has been to pass a CW test and grab a license will now be
stuck in the denial phase a long time now... they just lost their
whole world, image and ego!

Even the slowest of citizens will now realize that being an amateur
has never really been of any real merit or standing--and darn CB'er
can use a damn radio!

John

"Cmdr Buzz Corey" wrote in message
...
wrote:
No.

These olde-tyme hammes will do ALL the "help" just as they
have "helped" others in the past.

For example, in 1958 the FCC deallocated the 11m band from
hams and created Class C and D CB. Oh, the Hue and Cry they
raised in the US of A! Imagine, below-30-MHz privileges
WITHOUT TESTING FOR MORSE CODE! Imagine, NO TEST AT ALL TO
GET A FEDERALLY-AUTHORIZED LICENSE!!

All them olde-tymers quickly got into action to Demand Their
Big Band Sound BACK! They're still working on getting it
back. :-)



And like other fools you attempt to keep the myth alive. In 40+
years of hamming I have never heard one ham (that inclueds the
olde-tyme hammes) that complained about about the loss of 11 meters.
The hams had 10 meters where they operated and rarely used 11, so
the loss to the ham community was nothing.



  #8   Report Post  
Old July 24th 05, 07:04 PM
 
Posts: n/a
Default

From: Cmdr Buzz Corey on Sat 23 Jul 2005 21:52

wrote:

For example, in 1958 the FCC deallocated the 11m band from
hams and created Class C and D CB. Oh, the Hue and Cry they
raised in the US of A! Imagine, below-30-MHz privileges
WITHOUT TESTING FOR MORSE CODE! Imagine, NO TEST AT ALL TO
GET A FEDERALLY-AUTHORIZED LICENSE!!

All them olde-tymers quickly got into action to Demand Their
Big Band Sound BACK! They're still working on getting it
back. :-)


And like other fools you attempt to keep the myth alive.


Nope. That's not a "myth" but ACTUAL FACT. Look at Broose
and his constant "CBplusser" snarlings. "Lid" like operation
is commonly referred to as "CB" activity. All kinds of
nastygrams are sent when olde-tyme hammes have a need to
cuss out someone. :-)

In 40+ years of
hamming I have never heard one ham (that inclueds the olde-tyme hammes)
that complained about about the loss of 11 meters.


Tsk. You obviously don't get out much and your hearing is
way worse than Coslo's.

Go to the Comments at the FCC ECFS on WT Docket 05-235. All
them olde-tymers complaining about ham radio gonna be "worse
than CB!" (along with the threats of the sky falling, etc.).

The hams had 10
meters where they operated and rarely used 11, so the loss to the ham
community was nothing.


Yeah, yeah, tell us all about olde-tymer. In 1958 you were
just another pretty face on the TV tube (in black and white)
doing adventures in space. Very heroic. Your limited fan
base must have swelled your cranium past the ability to sense
ordinary terrestrial hobby activities in radio.

Buzziebaby, be prepared to go digital by 2009. And get some
better writers, okay? Your scripts in here are a POS.

bit bit


  #9   Report Post  
Old July 24th 05, 08:46 PM
Cmdr Buzz Corey
 
Posts: n/a
Default

wrote:
From: Cmdr Buzz Corey on Sat 23 Jul 2005 21:52
And like other fools you attempt to keep the myth alive.



Nope. That's not a "myth" but ACTUAL FACT. Look at Broose
and his constant "CBplusser" snarlings. "Lid" like operation
is commonly referred to as "CB" activity. All kinds of
nastygrams are sent when olde-tyme hammes have a need to
cuss out someone. :-)


And where in that do you get they are somehow upset about losing 11
meters? It is a FACT that the cbers turned 11 meters into the sewer pit
of radio.


In 40+ years of
hamming I have never heard one ham (that inclueds the olde-tyme hammes)
that complained about about the loss of 11 meters.



Tsk. You obviously don't get out much and your hearing is
way worse than Coslo's.

Go to the Comments at the FCC ECFS on WT Docket 05-235. All
them olde-tymers complaining about ham radio gonna be "worse
than CB!" (along with the threats of the sky falling, etc.).


And again, how do you see in that anyone complaining about losing 11
meters? No, most hams don't want the ham bands to become what the cbers
have made of 11 meters. No complaing about losing it, just don't want
the ham bands to become like it.


The hams had 10
meters where they operated and rarely used 11, so the loss to the ham
community was nothing.




Yeah, yeah, tell us all about olde-tymer. In 1958 you were
just another pretty face on the TV tube (in black and white)
doing adventures in space. Very heroic. Your limited fan
base must have swelled your cranium past the ability to sense
ordinary terrestrial hobby activities in radio.



The hams hardly used 11 meters. In 1958 I was listening to hams almost
on a daily basis. Sure there were a few at the time who may have
complained a bit, but you attempt to make it sound as if half the ham
community is still upset. Not so lennieboy, the hams never missed not
having 11 meters. If they knew what a sewer pit of radio communication
the brain-dead cbers would make of it, they probably would have raise a
real stink.


Buzziebaby, be prepared to go digital by 2009. And get some
better writers, okay? Your scripts in here are a POS.


Here, you are the ever present POS lennieboy.
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